Foundations, government agencies, and nonprofits recognize that public and organizational policy change is a pathway to sustainable improvements in community health. However, investing in and evaluating broad, complex policy initiatives is challenging. Compared to more straightforward program evaluation, policy and advocacy evaluations must contend with far more dynamic and fluid situations that are often difficult to untangle. The policy spectrum is a concrete tool that evaluators and foundations can use to focus their efforts and assess progress across multiple sites. The spectrum:
The policy spectrum framework brings insights throughout the initiative to help understand progress and strengthen the ongoing work. By understanding the stages of policy change, stakeholders can better engage in understand progress and improving their efforts in real time.
To see the model in action, check out one of the following examples of how CCHE has used this model to evaluate support policy and advocacy initiatives across the country:
In 2012, the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky launched a six-year initiative to make public policy more responsive to the health and health care needs of Kentuckians. The evaluation leveraged the policy spectrum to focus not only how policies are passed, but also to shine a light on the efforts of advocates to monitor and influence how key policies, such as Medicaid expansion, are implemented. This Health Affairs blog post details how the evaluation supported PRHP during sudden changes in Kentucky’s political landscaping.
CityHealth, an initiative of the de Beaumont Foundation and Kaiser Permanente, promotes a menu of twelve policies that address social determinants of health across the 75 largest cities in the United States and recognizes policy adoption with medals. The evaluation uses the policy spectrum to support stakeholder understanding of key facilitators and challenges that arise at each stage of policy advancement.
The SPARCC initiative aims to shift decades of racially discriminatory policies and investments that have resulted in disparities in health and climate resilience in communities throughout the United States. SPARCC’s work is implemented by collaborative tables in six sites that formalize multi-sector relationships, facilitate collaboration, and provide a vehicle for community leadership and power. SPARCC seeks to influence systems of community investments, of which policy and practice change is a key component. The policy spectrum is the foundation on which CCHE’s evaluation assesses seemingly diffuse aspects of the work to understand the critical steps of progress towards broader systems change.